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Coleridge House

A Grade II Listed Building in City of Westminster, London

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.4866 / 51°29'11"N

Longitude: -0.1397 / 0°8'22"W

OS Eastings: 529261

OS Northings: 178044

OS Grid: TQ292780

Mapcode National: GBR DP.T8

Mapcode Global: VHGQZ.JWHR

Plus Code: 9C3XFVP6+J4

Entry Name: Coleridge House

Listing Date: 22 December 1998

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1271487

English Heritage Legacy ID: 472010

ID on this website: 101271487

Location: Pimlico, Westminster, London, SW1V

County: London

District: City of Westminster

Electoral Ward/Division: Churchill

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: City of Westminster

Traditional County: Middlesex

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Greater London

Church of England Parish: St Gabriel Warwick Square

Church of England Diocese: London

Tagged with: House

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Description


TQ 2978 SW WESTMINSTER CHURCHILL GARDENS ROAD
(North side)
1900/109/10107
Coleridge House

GV II


Block of 72 flats. Design won in competition 1946, built 1947-51; Powell and Moya architects for Westminster City Council, Parker Morris town clerk. Monolithic reinforced concrete frame clad in buff bricks over blue brick plinth, though floor slabs exposed and painted. Nine storeys and basement; flat roofs. Large flats arranged in pairs off four projecting stairwells with lifts tucked behind. Three-bedroom flats on ground to seventh floors, set in mirrored pairs with canted balconies. One- and two-bedroom flats on eighth floor set back behind access gallery and long private terrace. Wired glass to fronts of balconies and landings, the rendered walls to the rear of those originally brightly painted. The projecting stairwells with painted concrete stairs and straight steel balusters, and full-height metal glazing to sides. All windows to flats renewed in UPVC in 1990, replicating the original pattern save for extra central transom. The alteration has not affected the character of the blocks. Original pattern doors with upper half glazed. Projecting lift machinery and water tanks set within circular roof-top drums which are a distinctive feature of the estate. Short side elevation facing south has tiny two-light windows not found on the other blocks. Interiors not of special interest. Original name signs. Churchill Gardens was the most ambitious housing scheme of the 1940s, and the first built following an international competition. Phase IA, comprising Chaucer, Coleridge, Keats and Shelley Houses with Britain's first district heating system, won a Festival of Britain Award in 1951, and the whole estate won two Civic Trust Awards in 1962. 'The tall early blocks ... are a striking example of the simplificatio of tall building design by minimizing the expression of the horizontal layers of the section and accenting the continuity of such features as stair and lift towers which use the full height' wrote the American critic Henry-Russell Hitchcock in praise of the estate in 1953. Designed by architects aged only 24 and 25, the generous flats and carefully laid-out grounds and services set new standards of public housing as a model for the post-war era at the maximum permitted density of 200 persons per acre. Churchill Gardens have been celebrated since the first block, Chaucer House, opened: in 1952 the Architects' Journal considered that it was 'deservedly becoming the most highly praised example of high density development in the country'; while in 1981 Lord Esher called it 'the most successful high-density project in London.


Listing NGR: TQ2926178044

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